It's the BOINC wrapper. It's compiled in debug mode so it prints out a bit of the strings (a few chars from the path names, mostly "programdata" or translations) which are still allocated at the wrapper exit. You should be able to hide your PCs and workunits with preferences.

Well, it could show my computers, not the damn folder tree.
And jeez why on earth it shall show my folders, out of the boinc tree?

I don't understand what it is you are seeing.

Look at the image I linked in the first message.
It logs folders set in search path.

You made the ascii text unreadable with that red mark, but the funny thing is that the hex numbers after the unreadable text encode the same information. So now I know that your given host has an environmental setting of TMP=D:\ProgramDa... The only information which is leaked that your host has a D: drive (as every Windows has a hidden system folder called ProgramData, usually in the root of the C: drive).
Being such an ingenious hacker as I am, I still don't know how on Earth could I use it for my nefarious purposes.

We do.
As it is stated by Toni right after your question: it's not the GPUGrid app, but the BOINC wrapper does it because it was compiled in "debug" mode so it prints out some app and system related strings to help debug the connection between the app and the BOINC wrapper.
The BOINC wrapper is not GPUGrid's "product".

We do.
As it is stated by Toni right after your question: it's not the GPUGrid app, but the BOINC wrapper does it because it was compiled in "debug" mode so it prints out some app and system related strings to help debug the connection between the app and the BOINC wrapper.
The BOINC wrapper is not GPUGrid's "product".

Still a security issue IMHO

I don't agree with you.

Correct. You have a problem with the BOINC Wrapper app and you should vent your paranoia at the BOINC developers which wrote the application.

Anyway, collaborating with BOINC projects is an altruist and voluntary action.
If somebody feels unsafe or uncomfortable at GPUGrid, there is always the chance to look for alternatives at other (better?) projects.

it's not the GPUGrid app, but the BOINC wrapper does it because it was compiled in "debug" mode so it prints out some app and system related strings to help debug the connection between the app and the BOINC wrapper.
The BOINC wrapper is not GPUGrid's "product".

It is shown on your website as result log of your application. It is not shown on anyone else's project debug logs.
I'm participating on other projects, and only GPUGRID shows such info.
You're wrong.

it's not the GPUGrid app, but the BOINC wrapper does it because it was compiled in "debug" mode so it prints out some app and system related strings to help debug the connection between the app and the BOINC wrapper.
The BOINC wrapper is not GPUGrid's "product".

It is shown on your website as result log of your application. It is not shown on anyone else's project debug logs.
I'm participating on other projects, and only GPUGRID shows such info.
You're wrong.

as has been said, it's the BOINC wrapper.

your computers are hidden anyway. no one can see what you're talking about outside of your screenshot that you posted yourself, so any perceived security concern is kind of moot anyway.
you need to address your concerns on the BOINC forum: Questions and Problems
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